This study discusses ‘recategorized’ verbs that are derived from nouns, focusing on those that have no overt categorial morphology. On the basis of evidence from past tense inflection with privative locatum verbs, I argue that the event structure can select for nouns rather than roots, and that this is another potential source of obligatory recategorization beyond determination of meaning for the root. I also dispute the empirical generalizations of Borer (2013), whose theory disallows zero-derived recategorization altogether
This study adjudicates between two opposing accounts of morphological productivity, using English pa...
Brain imaging studies of English past tense inflection have found dissociations between regular and ...
Logical metonymy combines an event-selecting verb with an entity-denoting noun (e.g.,The writer bega...
This study discusses ‘recategorized’ verbs that are derived from nouns, focusing on those that have ...
Although English verbs can be either regular (walk-walked) or irregular (sing-sang), “denominal verb...
This paper is concerned with the morphosyntax of deverbal zero-derived nominals (e.g., to climb >...
One of the main topics on the study of the relationship between syntax and morphology is (deverbal) ...
The present article investigates Pinker’s (1991) Dual Mechanism model in non-native (and native) mor...
In this response article, I will challenge some of the claims presented by Iordăchioaia & Werner by ...
Derived Nominals are considered to be the last stage in the nominalization scale. This scale include...
International audienceSince Rumelhart & McClelland (1986) first presented their connectionist model ...
Event structural theories decompose verb meanings into an event template and idiosyncratic root. Man...
What explains the rich patterns of deverbal nominalization? Why do some nouns have argument structur...
Denominal verbs are produced by a syntactic category shift, conversion, in which the word’s inflecti...
The paper argues that names constitute a primary linguistic category: they do not constitute a subcl...
This study adjudicates between two opposing accounts of morphological productivity, using English pa...
Brain imaging studies of English past tense inflection have found dissociations between regular and ...
Logical metonymy combines an event-selecting verb with an entity-denoting noun (e.g.,The writer bega...
This study discusses ‘recategorized’ verbs that are derived from nouns, focusing on those that have ...
Although English verbs can be either regular (walk-walked) or irregular (sing-sang), “denominal verb...
This paper is concerned with the morphosyntax of deverbal zero-derived nominals (e.g., to climb >...
One of the main topics on the study of the relationship between syntax and morphology is (deverbal) ...
The present article investigates Pinker’s (1991) Dual Mechanism model in non-native (and native) mor...
In this response article, I will challenge some of the claims presented by Iordăchioaia & Werner by ...
Derived Nominals are considered to be the last stage in the nominalization scale. This scale include...
International audienceSince Rumelhart & McClelland (1986) first presented their connectionist model ...
Event structural theories decompose verb meanings into an event template and idiosyncratic root. Man...
What explains the rich patterns of deverbal nominalization? Why do some nouns have argument structur...
Denominal verbs are produced by a syntactic category shift, conversion, in which the word’s inflecti...
The paper argues that names constitute a primary linguistic category: they do not constitute a subcl...
This study adjudicates between two opposing accounts of morphological productivity, using English pa...
Brain imaging studies of English past tense inflection have found dissociations between regular and ...
Logical metonymy combines an event-selecting verb with an entity-denoting noun (e.g.,The writer bega...